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A Tail Fiber Protein and a Receptor-Binding Protein Mediate ICP2 Bacteriophage Interactions with Vibrio cholerae OmpU
- Source :
- J Bacteriol, Journal of bacteriology, vol 203, iss 13
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- ICP2 is a virulent bacteriophage (phage) that preys on Vibrio cholerae. ICP2 was first isolated from cholera patient stool samples. Some of these stools also contained ICP2-resistant isogenic V. cholerae strains harboring missense mutations in the trimeric outer membrane porin protein OmpU, identifying it as the ICP2 receptor. In this study, we identify the ICP2 proteins that mediate interactions with OmpU by selecting for ICP2 host range mutants within infant rabbits infected with a mixture of wild-type and OmpU mutant strains. ICP2 host range mutants that can now infect OmpU mutant strains have missense mutations in the putative tail fiber gene gp25 and the putative adhesin gene gp23. Using site-specific mutagenesis, we show that single or double mutations in gp25 are sufficient to generate the host range mutant phenotype. However, at least one additional mutation in gp23 is required for robust plaque formation on specific OmpU mutants. Mutations in gp23 alone were insufficient to produce a host range mutant phenotype. All ICP2 host range mutants retained the ability to form plaques on wild-type V. cholerae cells. The strength of binding of host range mutants to V. cholerae correlated with plaque morphology, indicating that the selected mutations in gp25 and gp23 restore molecular interactions with the receptor. We propose that ICP2 host range mutants evolve by a two-step process. First, gp25 mutations are selected for their broad host range, albeit accompanied by low-level phage adsorption. Subsequent selection occurs for gp23 mutations that further increase productive binding to specific OmpU alleles, allowing for near-wild-type efficiencies of adsorption and subsequent phage multiplication. IMPORTANCE Concern over multidrug-resistant bacterial pathogens, including Vibrio cholerae, has led to renewed interest in phage biology and the potential for phage therapy. ICP2 is a genetically unique virulent phage isolated from cholera patient stool samples. It is also one of three phages in a prophylactic cocktail that have been shown to be effective in animal models of infection and the only one of the three that requires a protein receptor (OmpU). This study identifies an ICP2 tail fiber and a receptor binding protein and examines how ICP2 responds to the selective pressures of phage-resistant OmpU mutants. We found that this particular coevolutionary arms race presents fitness costs to both ICP2 and V. cholerae.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_treatment
Mutant
medicine.disease_cause
Medical and Health Sciences
Bacteriophage
tail fiber protein
Cholera
Models
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Bacteriophages
Aetiology
Vibrio cholerae
0303 health sciences
Mutation
biology
Bacterial
Viral Tail Proteins
Biological Sciences
Foodborne Illness
Adhesins
Infectious Diseases
Phenotype
arms race
Models, Animal
Rabbits
Infection
Research Article
bacteriophages
Phage therapy
Inositol Phosphates
Mutation, Missense
Mutagenesis (molecular biology technique)
Virulence
Porins
Microbiology
Host Specificity
Vaccine Related
03 medical and health sciences
Biodefense
Genetics
medicine
Animals
Humans
Antigens
OmpU
Adhesins, Bacterial
Molecular Biology
Alleles
030304 developmental biology
Antigens, Bacterial
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Host Microbial Interactions
Animal
030306 microbiology
Prevention
biology.organism_classification
Bacterial adhesin
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Good Health and Well Being
Capsid Proteins
Missense
Digestive Diseases
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10985530
- Volume :
- 203
- Issue :
- 13
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of bacteriology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a16b87e67c9846c640d6d3e23b5dcb22